Jerome bedding



@with gieren... stent @fitted -JBBOME Become, vOF GHABLESTOWMAND AJOHN B. concor BOSTON,

MAssaoHUsBTTs. I

' IMPROVBDPASTRY-IIGGER.

@the tlphulmtnnh tu tripa @titten-haten :un mating gmt tf the sans.

To ALL WHOM ITMAY' CONOBBN;

Be it known that we, JEROME nimma, o f Charlestown, Middlesex @mem-ana JOHN B. ooe,- of Boston, Suiiolk county, all inthe State of Massachusetts, have invented/an Improved lastry-Jigger; and we do hereby ldeclare that-thefollowingt taken connection with the drawings vwhichaccompany and form part of this specil cation, is a description of our invention suliici-ent to enable thoseisltillediin the art to practise it;l

The invention relafesto the COnStrucKronofan instrument called a. pi-e orVpastry-jigger, the purpose of which is to ornament the edgesoi pies and other pastry-such instrument havingol rotary wheel with peripheral teeth, the rotation of this `wheel around the-edge ofthe pie or piece of pastry mailing' the indentations by which the edge-of the pastryis ornamented.

' These wheels have heretofore been put upon the extreme end ofttheliinstrument; andto keep the wheel at an even distance from the edge of the pastry or pie-plate, requires some considerable skill; and thc object of our invention has been to so construct a'pastryjigger"thatfit could bejguided without skillfor so as to make a uniformly concentric circle O''indenta'tions in the' surfaceof the paste.V l v Our invention consists in a. pastry-jigger having a circumferential marker, the' operative face of which is notched or grooved, to produce ornamental markings, and is substantially at right angles with a shanlr, which is `provided at one end with a notched or ornamental marker, which serves the purpose of a gauge to guide the other marker, so as to cause the indented path vthereby made to be parallel with' the edgeagainst which `the marking-gauge is kept in contact. A

The drawings represent an instrument embodying our improvement. A. shows a front view of the jigger." I B, a side or edge view thereof. a denotes the shtml( at the instrument, having the marker-wheel b ator near oneend thereof, while its opposite end may have lateral projections c, cut out on the lower-surface, with an ornamental design to make detached imprints upon the surfaceof the pastry.

The wheel is mounted loosely on a'pin', d, projecting from an extension, e, from the shanl ,'and this extension continues beyond the wheel, making a guide-, f, forrunning against the edge ofthe plate, and for` thereby keeping the wheel at a uniform distance from such edge, as its teeth g roll around the' piece of pastry,

:1s-before set forth.

This guide may be made plain, or it may branch laterally7 and he furnished with teeth 7L, to indent thepaste.

With the jigger thus made, pastry can be milch more-expeditiously and-uniformly oruamented'th'an with l paetry-jiggers as now in common use, and this vwithout any skill other than that required to pass the-instrument".

around -a plate.

We claim, as a new article of manufacture, a pastry-jigger made upo'f a circumferential,marker, b, and a. shank, which, while operating as a gauge,'is notched, so as also to serve as a marker, as described.

' JEROME REDDING, JOHN B. COE. Witnesses:

J. B. CROSBY, Il nANozsl Govan. 

